• The Dow Jones climbed around 250 points on Thursday as sentiment continues to improve.
  • US PPI inflation eased faster than expected in April, but future risks remain.
  • UoM sentiment survey results are in the barrel for Friday.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) pared early-week losses and rose about 250 points on Thursday. Equities were bolstered by a better-than-expected Producer Price Index (PPI) inflation print that showed upstream inflation effects are still cooling at a faster rate than initially expected. While tariff-based risks to both employment and inflation remain an ongoing concern, investors remain hopeful that early trade talks between the United States (US) and China will continue to develop into meaningful, more permanent suspensions of high tariffs going in both directions.

US PPI inflation chilled more than expected in April, with business-level inflation contracting 0.5% MoM. Core PPI inflation in April also fell 0.4%, with annualized core business inflation easing to 2.4% YoY from the previous period’s 2.7%. With both CPI and PPI measures for April giving better-than-expected inflation prints this week, investors are allowing themselves the room to hope that ongoing trade talks between the US and China will avert the worst of potential tariff damage.

The Trump administration pulled the tariff gun away from its own head last weekend when it temporarily suspended its own 145% tariffs on all Chinese goods, causing the Chinese government to do the same and rescind its own triple-digit tariffs. The tariff suspension is only slated to last 90 days, giving investors room to breathe but not enough to relax entirely.

Cooling inflation puts investors in a buying mood, but risks remain

Equity markets are expected to continue to find reasons to buy for now, but a slate of possible headwinds still lurk ahead. Even with the Trump administration’s 90-day tariff reprieve, import taxes on nearly all goods bound for the US remain far higher than in recent history. According to estimates by Fitch Ratings, the US’s Effective Tariff Rate (ETR) is globally over 13% in 2025, compared to 2024’s ETR of just 2.4%. The ETR on Chinese goods specifically still remains over 30%, even with the temporary suspension of retaliatory tariffs. A strong step up in import taxes poses risks to both inflation and employment, and risks sparking a period of “stagflation” in the US economy. As noted by Joe Cusick, senior vice president at Calamos Investments:

“This is a market that has shifted to cautious optimism… as recession fears begin to recede and equity markets demonstrate underlying strength. However, a number of macro and micro risks continue to form a ‘wall of worry’ that investors must navigate.”

The University of Michigan’s (UoM) latest Consumer Sentiment Index will be released on Friday. Median market forecasts are expecting an uptick in consumer survey results, which has fallen for four consecutive months to hit a two-year low of 52.2. Investors are hoping that consumer sentiment will recover slightly and push the index back up to 53.4.

Read more stock news: UnitedHealth Group plunges 17% as Justice Department opens Medicare fraud probe

Dow Jones price forecast

The Dow Jones Industrial Average has clawed back most of its midweek soft losses, but still remains down from Monday’s peak of 42,410. Bullish momentum has successfully muscled the Dow Jones back over the 200-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) near 41,600, at least for now.

Topside momentum is bound to continue as long as fundamental factors continue to hold keel-side down. However, technical oscillators are flashing strong warning signs that price action is pinned deep into overbought territory, and is overdue for some form of technical correction.

Dow Jones daily chart

Economic Indicator

Producer Price Index ex Food & Energy (YoY)

The Producer Price Index ex Food & energy released by the Bureau of Labor statistics, Department of Labor measures the average changes in prices in primary markets of the US by producers of commodities in all states of processing. Those volatile products such as food and energy are excluded in order to capture an accurate calculation. Generally speaking, a high reading is seen as positive (or bullish) for the USD, whereas a low reading is seen as negative (or bearish).


Read more.

Read the full article here

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version